Hello again,
The analysis is already in full cry. Of course it is.
First the marketing website updated with Morse Code, then the mailed VHS tapes of disembodied voices and radio sounds, then the flyposters. The narrative has quickly moved from whether the first Boards of Canada album in thirteen years is soon to land (with the release online in the past week of Tape 05, this became obvious) to what subliminal messages as to its content could be gleaned from these assorted teasers.
Is Inferno an album primarily concerned with the apocalypse? Death cults? The cosmos? Recollections of a past that has gone and was never quite there in the way people remember it anyway? All of the above? None of it?
I'm quite happy to leave all of these questions to minds more predisposed towards being able to pick such things apart than mine, in truth. Boards Of Canada remain an act whose work I've enjoyed hugely, but primarily on musical and aesthetic bases rather than an intellectual one, for three decades now, and I anticipate no change in that position in the months to come.
Tape 05, an alternative title for what will evidently be the track Father and Son on the album proper, at once gave me all of the things I want and like from the Sandison brothers' output. Warmth, beauty, nostalgia and familiarity, but foreboding, disquiet, sadness and menace at the same time also. Rare is the music which can do all of that for me at once, much less - as here - sometimes within as few as three and a half minutes.
Boards Of Canada were due to appear in a List before very much longer anyway, as one previous offering also happened to be (and continues to be) my favourite song of the year in which it was released. See if you can guess which song that might be; I'll say no more for now, other than it struck me as the perfect, perpetual soundtrack to any urbex documentary on a long-dead city or resort.
Instead, with the Inferno campaign having rapidly overtaken my original intentions, Tape 05 takes its place within a Session of Sorts feature also containing three other personal favourites from somewhat further back in this duo's catalogue, including one of a couple of John Peel-oriented highlights this week.
The release of Studio Kosmische's pair of covers of Cluster's Creme Caramel barely a week before Tape 05 came out, meanwhile, is nothing more than a coincidence, but in the circumstances an inadvertently timely one.
Creme Caramel's original parent album, 1974's Zuckerzeit, was lauded at the time (and since) as being more accessible and concise than the kosmische duo's earlier works, and ultimately laid down a blueprint for so much of what has followed in electronic music.
No Zuckerzeit-era Cluster, no early Warp Records roster, as one Quietus reviewer has opined? That feels instinctively like a bit of a reach, and I've listened to too little Cluster to date to be dogmatic about the matter anyway, but perhaps I need to put in a few hard yards with their back catalogue nevertheless ahead of next week's choice of A Loved Album, if that's not giving away too much about what it might be.
I wouldn't be sure what historic debt the Benelux 'ardcode techno acts of the late 1980s and early 1990s presumed to owe the likes of Cluster, inspiration likely being derived more from Detroit than Deutschland. It's a period and genre of music dear to my heart all the same - invigorating, energetic and that little bit menacing to me in a way that I'd imagined punk would have been to those at the appropriate age to be informed (or knocked sideways) by it at its own birth.
Quadrophonia had already received a Belgium-only release by ARS Productions subsidiary Streetbeats in 1990, but for which it would have been not only a That Music List Single Of The Year selection, but the oldest such selection.
Instead, our paths met when it crossed over to become a UK top 20 hit the following spring (it peaked at #14 in April 1991), that enormous synth-orchestra break and pulsing, neurotic backing affording me the greatest frisson of excitement about a dance music record in the charts since Stakker Humanoid almost two and a half years earlier.
Whether by accident or design, Quadrophonia's wider-scale ARS issue (reissue?) preceded the appearance in the charts of T99's Anasthasia by just a month, thereby briefly giving the impression of Olivier Abbeloos, the musical brains behind both, as the most ubiquitous and exciting producer of that time period.
It couldn't last, and didn't, and none of Olivier's many lily-gilding remixes of the first-named track in the intervening 35 years have served to change that. Nonetheless, it's still really nice to observe him speak so fondly about the original in the various present-day interviews with him online.
It's not all assorted keyboard prodders of various vintages in this week's List, rest assured. You might also like:
- A reminder from Colour Me Wednesday to all male practitioners or consumers of music to get their respective knuckles off the floor and cut out the mansplaining.
(Colour Me Wednesday - Going Up the Country, Church House Inn, Congleton 10/06/2017. Pictures are author's own)
- The Fourth Act, something brand new from Bradford, which to these ears sends off major Elephant 6 vibes. These could be fun to watch in the short term at least, though please don't turn into the type of people the Doveton sisters above would despise, lads.
- The original incarnation of Credit to the Nation's breakthrough single, actual Nirvana sample and all.
- The Anchoress delivering some well-aimed ripostes to all of the unsolicited advice offered to her in the before, during and after of becoming a mum. As (relatively) mature parents to have suffered losses along the way ourselves, this track hits home.
- More Peel-endorsed (and in the clip found, Peel-introduced) mashup/bootleg/bastard pop fun, this time from an act in Picasio that I've always assumed may be something to do with Cassetteboy. They certainly farmed the first three or four releases on the Barry's Bootlegs label between them, at least.
- The Itch seemingly sticking the boot into the Yard Acts of this world (and I'm not utterly unsympathetic to their view; get BBC Radio 6 Music on the wrong day, and sprechgesang fatigue can rapidly become a thing), but remembering to ally that invective to a sufficiently catchy tune.
- Stereo Total. Because there just aren't enough songs in German about threesomes.
- Firmly in the "have I really never featured this track in a List before now?!?" category, the opening track from the first of Aberdeen's two EPs for Sarah Records, and for my money still their absolute career highlight.
- A Godley & Creme track which - and this is no word of a lie - I heard once or twice about forty years ago, never knew it was by them or what it was called, and had utterly forgotten about until someone shared a link to it not so long ago on a Facebook presence for Cardiacs fans. Those opening bars of the repeated xylophone motif opened the floodgates of the memory instantaneously. I love the power music has to lie in wait for you like that, for decades at a time if needs be. There'll be another List selection - appropriately enough for the My Forgotten 80s... feature - in the coming weeks with which I have shared an almost identical relationship.
- Finally, my favourite Lionrock song by a wide margin (as well as a track loved by my former university colleague Darren Hampton - hope you're doing well, sir), and although slightly too short to qualify for The Long Goodbye on the track length criterion I set for that feature, nevertheless a perfect way on which to end another busy List.
J xx
Click on the video or link to play each tune (links last checked as all working 22/04/2026).
Click here for a directory of updated older Lists.SPACEMOTH - Do We Exist? (2026)
ABERDEEN - Byron (1994)
A SESSION OF SORTS: Boards of Canada
BOARDS OF CANADA - Tape 05 (2026)
IF WE DO, WE’LL KEEP IT ALIVE
PICTISH TRAIL - Life Slime (2025)
HAZEL ENGLISH - I'm Fine (2016)
COM.A – Hugluvsuck (2003)
SCIENTISTROCK
EUROTASTIC
GAZEBO - I Like Chopin (1983)
THE FOURTH ACT - Filthy Rich (2026)
BADMARSH & SHRI – Swarm (2001)
A SESSION OF SORTS: Boards of Canada
I WAS AN ARMCHAIR RAVER
STATE OF GRACE - Miss You (1993)
BULLETPROOF
A SESSION OF SORTS: Boards of Canada
MATTIEL - Lighthouse (2022)







